Ben Hecht Quotations

I discovered early in my movie work that a movie is never any better than the stupidest
man connected with it. There are times when this distinction may be given to the writer
or director. Most often it belongs to the producer.

Movies are one of the bad habits that corrupted our century. Of their many sins, I
offer as the worst their effect on the intellectual side of the nation. It is chiefly
from that viewpoint I write of them--as an eruption of trash that has lamed the American
mind and retarded Americans from becoming a cultured people.

Hollywood held this double lure for me, tremendous sums of money for work that required
no more effort than a game of pinochle.

When you overpay small people you frighten them. They know that their merits or
activities entitle them to no such sums as they are receiving. As a result their
boss soars out of economic into magic significance. He becomes a source of
blessings rather than wages. Criticism is sacrilege, doubt is heresy.

Much more frequent in Hollywood than the emergence of Cinderella is her sudden
vanishing. At our party, even in those glowing days, the clock was always striking
twelve for someone at the height of greatness; and there was never a prince to fetch
her back to the happy scene.

Out of the thousand writers huffing and puffing through movieland there are scarcely
fifty men and women of wit or talent. The rest of the fraternity is deadwood. Yet,
in a curious way, there is not much difference between the product of a good writer
and a bad one. They both have to toe the same mark.